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title: Rejected Bio from The Setup | ||
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<p class="meta">03 May 2011 - San Francisco</p> | ||
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Yesterday, [the autobiographical post I wrote for The | ||
Setup](http://tom.preston-werner.usesthis.com/) went live. I wrote that post | ||
over a year ago and then entered into an epic battle with | ||
[@waferbaby](http://twitter.com/#!/waferbaby) about the length of my "Who are | ||
you, and what do you do?" section. He said it was too long. I said it could | ||
not be shortened. And so the post sat for a year, collecting dust, neither of | ||
us prepared to back down. | ||
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About a month ago I decided that it was foolish to let the words I had written rot on my hard drive and so I did the only thing I knew how to do: overreact. So I cut the original nine-hundred words of my bio down to fourteen words and resubmitted it to Daniel. Those are the words you see in the post now. | ||
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For your pleasure, here is the original bio in its full, unabridged glory. | ||
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<hr /> | ||
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My name is Tom Preston-Werner. I find that the hyphenated last name | ||
makes me sound distinguished and worth listening to. I grew up three | ||
decades ago in a small city in Iowa along the Mississippi, which means | ||
I shucked a lot of corn and know exactly how many mosquitos will land | ||
on your arm should you hold it still for ten minutes at dusk on the | ||
muggiest day of the summer. As an aspiring theoretical particle | ||
physicist, I worked my way through entire shelves of scientific | ||
literature from the public library, desperately wanting to understand | ||
the bewildering mathematics that littered the pages like so many | ||
leaves on the bottom of that morning's cup of green tea. I searched in | ||
vain for instructors or classmates that could provide me with the | ||
insight necessary to comprehend the true meaning of Heisenberg's | ||
Uncertainty Principle, but all I found were underpaid math teachers | ||
and disillusioned "students" in search of their next smoke break. | ||
After obsessing over US News' Best Colleges reports for months I | ||
finally chose and was accepted to Harvey Mudd, a tiny engineering | ||
school in California famous for assigning the greatest number of hours | ||
of homework per night. This sounded just perfect to me. Finally a | ||
place I could bring up the EPR Paradox and not be immediately | ||
stigmatized as "that science weirdo with the hilariously thick glasses | ||
and unfortunate hairdo." | ||
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Mudd did not disappoint. But now I had the opposite problem. In order | ||
to properly understand particle physics, you must have a deep and | ||
profound love of math. You have to be so comfortable with abstract | ||
concepts that even Picasso would be jealous. Ironically, in order to | ||
grasp the fundamental reality of our universe, you must forget about | ||
the "reality" of everyday life and start living in a world comprised | ||
of eigenvectors, Hilbert spaces, and Planck's constant. This was a | ||
leap I could not make. I like math, but I'm too easily distracted by | ||
macroscopic reality to make it my profession. | ||
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Once I accepted that I would never spend late nights pouring over | ||
bubble chamber printouts at Fermilab, it became obvious that I was | ||
destined to enter computer science. I started programming in BASIC on | ||
a TRS-80 that my dad bought from Radio Shack when I was 8 years old. | ||
Since then, I'd learned to love the discipline and creativity involved | ||
in making a machine do my bidding. It was like having a super-obedient | ||
but annoyingly logical little brother. He'll do anything you want as | ||
long as you tell him in precise and unambiguous language. The best | ||
thing is, the feedback is immediate. In physics, it can take twenty | ||
years to prove that a single esoteric particle even exists. When | ||
you're writing a program that displays the number of electrons in each | ||
of the shells around the nucleus of every element, the feedback is | ||
immediate and intoxicating. With just a few keystrokes, the world is | ||
changed forever. Try to get that kind of rush even once in a lifetime | ||
as a theoretical particle physicist. I dare you. | ||
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In 1999, after two years of college, I dropped out of Harvey Mudd to | ||
join a startup with some friends that were graduating. It was the end | ||
of the first dot-com bubble and I thought I could strike it rich, | ||
right then and there. Sadly, like so many startups of the day, we | ||
never accomplished what we envisioned and I ended up bouncing between | ||
jobs and consulting gigs for six years until I found myself in San | ||
Francisco. If Harvey Mudd was my mecca for physicists, then San | ||
Francisco was my mecca for programmers. Where else can you be grabbing | ||
lunch at a taqueria and overhear a group at the next table discussing | ||
the finer points of optimizing C code to run on an embedded processor? | ||
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I moved to San Francisco to take a job as a Ruby developer with a | ||
Wikipedia search engine called Powerset. I also began attending Ruby | ||
meetups and drinking with local software developers. There are a lot | ||
of talented people in the Bay Area and I wanted to meet them all. | ||
Within the Ruby community, a distributed version control system called | ||
Git was starting to get some attention. It was a really cool way of | ||
working with other people on code, but there wasn't an easy way to get | ||
up and running with a group of developers. Along with cofounders Chris | ||
Wanstrath and PJ Hyett (who I met at the Ruby meetups) I started a | ||
company called GitHub that would address this problem and make it dead | ||
simple to share Git repositories and collaborate on code with other | ||
developers. | ||
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At first, we worked on GitHub on the side, putting in time on evenings | ||
and weekends. After six months we launched the site to the public and | ||
started charging. Not long after that, Powerset was acquired by | ||
Microsoft and I was faced with a choice: stay on as a Microsoft | ||
employee with a big retention bonus and give up GitHub or turn down | ||
the Microsoft money and quit Powerset to work on GitHub full-time. You | ||
can read more about this saga in my blog post entitled [How I Turned | ||
Down $300,000 from Microsoft to go Full-Time on | ||
GitHub](http://tom.preston-werner.com/2008/10/18/how-i-turned-down-300k.html). | ||
I think I made the right decision. | ||
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Today GitHub has ten employees and more than 730,000 users with over | ||
2,000,000 repositories. We're growing fast, and I'm having the time of | ||
my life! |